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Robert Dorman
75th division
Canadian Expeditionary Force
VERSE AND WORSE BY R.O. (BOB) DORMAN
A PARODY WHEN YOU PLAY IN THE GAME OF WAR
Sometimes a shell
Sometimes it's hell
Sometimes a bullet or two
Sometimes the gas is sneaking
Trying to catch you sleeping
Sometimes a bomb or trench mortar
Sometimes a whiz bang or two
Sometimes it's mud
Sometimes it's blood
When you play in the game
Called WAR
Poems from the Great War
Copyright © Karl Sack
Robert Dorman was born on the 6th of January 1900 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
He joined the Canadian Army in the fall of 1914. His mother Isobella was horrified, and managed to have him discharged by Christmas of that same year. He was fourteen years old. However on June 13, 1915, after what we can imagine was quite the battle at home, he rejoined the army enlisting in the 75th division of the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF), and was shipped to Horsham, England.
Within months he would be fighting in the drowning muds of France and Belgium. It was about that time that he began to write the following poems. His poetry is a first hand account, sometimes humorous, sometimes tragic, of his life in the trenches as a Canadian soldier during "The war that was to end all wars!".
I have copied the poems word for word as he wrote them. I hope you enjoy them as much as I have (and still do). If you have any comments please send me an email to Karl Sack
Enjoy the poems...Karl Sack
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